The Salt
2:39 pm
Wed July 25, 2012

Meat Producers And Ultimately, Consumers, Hurt By Drought

Credit Dan Charles / NPR
These piglets on the Hardin farm in Danville, Ind., are going to cost more to feed than they will fetch at market.

Originally published on Thu July 26, 2012 5:13 pm

Despite headlines about the crushing drought that's afflicting much of the country's prime agricultural land, the USDA isn't expecting any dramatic increases in the price of food this year or next.

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The Torch
2:29 pm
Wed July 25, 2012

U.S. Women's Soccer Starts London Olympics With A Comeback Win

Credit Graham Stuart / AFP/Getty Images
Carli Lloyd scores the U.S. team's winning goal, in a comeback win over France. The Americans are bidding for their third straight Olympic gold medal.

On the first day of competition in the 2012 Summer Olympics, the U.S. women's soccer team bounced back from an early deficit to beat France, 4-2. The game was a rematch for the two teams that met in last year's World Cup semifinals.

France jumped out to a 2-0 lead before the match was 15 minutes old, scoring on a breakaway run by Gaetane Thiney; moments later, a short-range shot found the back of the net after several U.S. players failed to clear the ball following a corner kick.

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Economy
1:42 pm
Wed July 25, 2012

Pray For Rain: Food Prices Heading Higher

Credit Justin Lane / EPA/Landov
A "historically low inventory" of cattle and hogs is driving up meat prices, a trend that's expected to continue next year, USDA economist Richard Volpe says.

Originally published on Wed July 25, 2012 3:30 pm

A fierce drought has been scorching crops this summer, but it's still too soon to know exactly how much of a hole it will burn in your wallet.

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The Two-Way
1:14 pm
Wed July 25, 2012

Reports Finds 'Widespread Human Rights Violations' In Policing Of Occupy Protests

Credit Frank Franklin II / AP
An Occupy Wall Street protestor is arrested in Zuccotti Park July 11, 2012, in New York.

Originally published on Wed July 25, 2012 3:21 pm

The New York Police Department has shown "a pattern of abusive and unaccountable protest policing" during the Occupy protests, a wide consortium of legal experts detail in a report (PDF) issued today.

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The Two-Way
12:58 pm
Wed July 25, 2012

Reporter's Notebook: In Afghanistan, Facts Are Difficult To Pin Down

  • Sean Carberry, in his second report on the defections
  • Sean Carberry in his first report on the defections

(Sean Carberry is a producer on NPR's foreign desk. From Kabul, he sent us this glimpse into the challenge of reporting on events in places such as Afghanistan.)

A story broke Tuesday that an Afghan police commander had defected to the Taliban along with a number of officers under his command. Early statements from the governor's office in Farah province said that "Mirwais," the commander of a police checkpoint, had poisoned seven of his men who refused to go along with the defection, and then he and 13 others disappeared with weapons and police vehicles.

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Music
12:50 pm
Wed July 25, 2012

Medicine Ball Caravan, July 25

Wednesday's MEDICINE BALL CARAVAN (11am-noon Central Standard on 88.7FM locally orĀ www.krvs.org) offers loads of backyard music by the likes of Corey Ledet, Jeffery Broussard, Bas Clas, Feu Follet, Chris Smither, Michael Juan Nunez & the American Electric, Ryan Montbleau and Anders Osborne. Also: an interpretation of classic blues by Led Zeppelin and accapella group, The Persuasions covering Frank Zappa. A splendid hour guaranteed for many!

All Songs Considered Blog
12:33 pm
Wed July 25, 2012

Vote For The Albums Everyone Can Love, For July 25

Credit iStock

Originally published on Wed October 17, 2012 10:05 am

If last week's poll is any indication, most of you don't care much for Madonna, Dave Matthews, or Whitney Houston, at least not for the records of theirs we suggested.

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The Two-Way
12:17 pm
Wed July 25, 2012

AP: 911 Tape Shows NYPD Operating Far Outside Its Jurisdiction

Credit Matt Apuzzo / AP
This July 13, 2011, photo shows the apartment complex in New Brunswick, N.J., where an apartment was rented by an undercover NYPD officer.
The Torch
12:15 pm
Wed July 25, 2012

Olympic Athletes' Names: Endurance (Track), Moist (Swimming), And A Leeper

Credit Andy Lyons / Allsport/Getty
Nathan Leeper of the United States jumps during the IAAF World Championships in this photo from 2001. A high jumper, Leeper is one of several athletes whose name suited their sport.

"What's in a name?" a British writer named Shakespeare once asked in Romeo and Juliet, long before the Olympics ever came to London.

Well, it turns out that some Olympic names herald the greatness athletes seek, and the events they enter, while some bear monikers better suited for others.

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Religion
12:10 pm
Wed July 25, 2012

Bishop Explains Vatican's Criticism Of U.S. Nuns

Credit Courtesy Catholic Diocese of Toledo
Leonard Blair of Toledo, Ohio is the bishop who assessed the Leadership Conference of Women Religious. You can hear Blair discuss the nuns' organization here.

Originally published on Wed July 25, 2012 6:32 pm

Four years ago, a Vatican group called "The Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith" began an assessment of the Leadership Conference of Women Religious, a member organization founded in 1956 that represents 80 percent of Catholic nuns in the United States. The assessment was designed to take a careful look at whether the nuns were acting in accordance with the teachings of the church.

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